---
title: Form
description: How to integrate Plate editor with react-hook-form.
---

While Plate is typically used as an **uncontrolled** input, there are valid scenarios where you want to integrate the editor within a form library like [**react-hook-form**](https://www.react-hook-form.com) or the [**Form**](https://ui.shadcn.com/docs/components/form) component from **shadcn/ui**. This guide walks through best practices and common pitfalls.

## When to Integrate Plate with a Form

- **Form Submission**: You want the editor's content to be included along with other fields (e.g., `<input>`, `<select>`) when the user submits the form.
- **Validation**: You want to validate the editor's content (e.g., checking if it's empty) at the same time as other form fields.
- **Form Data Management**: You want to store the editor content in the same store (like `react-hook-form`'s state) as other fields.

However, keep in mind the warning about **fully controlling** the editor value. Plate strongly prefer an uncontrolled model. If you attempt to replace the editor's internal state too frequently, you can break **selection**, **history**, or cause performance issues. The recommended pattern is to treat the editor as uncontrolled, but still **sync** form data on certain events.

## Approach 1: Sync on `onChange`

This is the most straightforward approach: each time the editor changes, update your form field's value. For small documents or infrequent changes, this is usually acceptable.

### React Hook Form Example

```tsx
import { useForm } from 'react-hook-form';
import type { Value } from 'platejs';
import { Plate, PlateContent, usePlateEditor } from 'platejs/react';

type FormData = {
  content: Value;
};

export function RHFEditorForm() {
  const initialValue = [
    { type: 'p', children: [{ text: 'Hello from react-hook-form!' }] },
  ]

  // Setup react-hook-form
  const { register, handleSubmit, setValue } = useForm<FormData>({
    defaultValues: {
      content: initialValue,
    },
  });

  // Create/configure the Plate editor
  const editor = usePlateEditor({ value: initialValue });

  // Register the field for react-hook-form
  register('content', { /* validation rules... */ });

  const onSubmit = (data: FormData) => {
    // data.content will have final editor content
    console.info('Submitted:', data.content);
  };

  return (
    <form onSubmit={handleSubmit(onSubmit)}>
      <Plate
        editor={editor}
        onChange={({ value }) => {
          // Sync editor changes to the form
          setValue('content', value);
        }}
      >
        <PlateContent placeholder="Type here..." />
      </Plate>

      <button type="submit">Submit</button>
    </form>
  );
}
```

**Notes**:
1. **`defaultValues.content`**: your initial editor content.
2. **`register('content')`**: signals to RHF that the field is tracked.  
3. **`onChange({ value })`**: calls `setValue('content', value)` each time.

If you expect large documents or fast typing, consider debouncing or switching to an `onBlur` approach to reduce form updates.

### shadcn/ui Form Example

[shadcn/ui](https://ui.shadcn.com/docs/components/form) provides a `<Form>` that integrates with react-hook-form. We'll use `<FormField>` to handle the field logic:

```tsx
import {
  Form,
  FormControl,
  FormField,
  FormItem,
  FormLabel,
  FormMessage,
} from '@/components/ui/form';
import { useForm } from 'react-hook-form';
import { Plate, PlateContent, usePlateEditor } from 'platejs/react';

type FormValues = {
  content: any;
};

export function EditorForm() {
  // 1. Create the form
  const form = useForm<FormValues>({
    defaultValues: {
      content: [
        { type: 'p', children: [{ text: 'Hello from shadcn/ui Form!' }] },
      ],
    },
  });

  // 2. Create the Plate editor
  const editor = usePlateEditor();

  const onSubmit = (data: FormValues) => {
    console.info('Submitted data:', data.content);
  };

  return (
    <Form {...form}>
      <form onSubmit={form.handleSubmit(onSubmit)}>
        <FormField
          control={form.control}
          name="content"
          render={({ field }) => (
            <FormItem>
              <FormLabel>Content</FormLabel>
              <FormControl>
                <Plate
                  editor={editor}
                  onChange={({ value }) => {
                    // Sync to the form
                    field.onChange(value);
                  }}
                >
                  <PlateContent placeholder="Type..." />
                </Plate>
              </FormControl>
              <FormMessage />
            </FormItem>
          )}
        />

        <button type="submit">Submit</button>
      </form>
    </Form>
  );
}
```

This approach makes your editor content behave like any other field in the shadcn/ui form.

## Approach 2: Sync on Blur (or Another Trigger)

Instead of syncing on every keystroke, you might only need the final value when the user:
- Leaves the editor (`onBlur`),
- Clicks a “Save” button, or
- Reaches certain form submission logic.

```tsx
<Plate editor={editor}>
  <PlateContent
    onBlur={() => {
      // Only sync on blur
      setValue('content', editor.children);
    }}
  />
</Plate>
```

This reduces overhead but your form state won't reflect partial updates while the user is typing.

## Approach 3: Controlled Replacement (Advanced)

If you want the form to be the single source of truth (completely [controlled](/docs/controlled)):
```ts
editor.tf.setValue(formStateValue);
```
But this has known drawbacks:
- Potentially breaks cursor position and undo/redo.
- Can cause frequent full re-renders for large docs.

**Recommendation**: Stick to a partially uncontrolled model if you can.

## Example: Save & Reset

Here's a more complete form demonstrating both saving and resetting the editor/form:

```tsx
import { useForm } from 'react-hook-form';
import { Plate, PlateContent, usePlateEditor } from 'platejs/react';

function MyForm() {
  const form = useForm({
    defaultValues: {
      content: [
        { type: 'p', children: [{ text: 'Initial content...' }] },
      ],
    },
  });

  const editor = usePlateEditor();

  const onSubmit = (data) => {
    alert(JSON.stringify(data, null, 2));
  };

  return (
    <form onSubmit={form.handleSubmit(onSubmit)}>
      <Plate
        editor={editor}
        onChange={({ value }) => form.setValue('content', value)}
      >
        <PlateContent />
      </Plate>

      <button type="submit">Save</button>

      <button
        type="button"
        onClick={() => {
          // Reset the editor
          editor.tf.reset();
          // Reset the form
          form.reset();
        }}
      >
        Reset
      </button>
    </form>
  );
}
```

- **`onChange`** -> updates form state.
- **Reset** -> calls both `editor.tf.reset()` and `form.reset()` for consistency.

## Migrating from a shadcn Textarea to Plate

If you have a standard [TextareaForm from shadcn/ui docs](https://ui.shadcn.com/docs/components/textarea#form) and want to replace `<Textarea>` with a Plate editor, you can follow these steps:

```tsx
// 1. Original code (TextareaForm)
<FormField
  control={form.control}
  name="bio"
  render={({ field }) => (
    <FormItem>
      <FormLabel>Bio</FormLabel>
      <FormControl>
        <Textarea
          placeholder="Tell us a bit about yourself"
          className="resize-none"
          {...field}
        />
      </FormControl>
      <FormDescription>
        You can <span>@mention</span> other users and organizations.
      </FormDescription>
      <FormMessage />
    </FormItem>
  )}
/>
```

Create a new `EditorField` component:

```tsx
// EditorField.tsx
"use client";

import * as React from "react";
import type { Value } from "platejs";
import { Plate, PlateContent, usePlateEditor } from "platejs/react";

/**
 * A reusable editor component that works like a standard <Textarea>,
 * accepting `value`, `onChange`, and optional placeholder.
 *
 * Usage:
 *
 * <FormField
 *   control={form.control}
 *   name="bio"
 *   render={({ field }) => (
 *     <FormItem>
 *       <FormLabel>Bio</FormLabel>
 *       <FormControl>
 *         <EditorField
 *           {...field}
 *           placeholder="Tell us a bit about yourself"
 *         />
 *       </FormControl>
 *       <FormDescription>Some helpful description...</FormDescription>
 *       <FormMessage />
 *     </FormItem>
 *   )}
 * />
 */
export interface EditorFieldProps
  extends React.HTMLAttributes<HTMLDivElement> {
  /**
   * The current Plate Value. Should be an array of Plate nodes.
   */
  value?: Value;

  /**
   * Called when the editor value changes.
   */
  onChange?: (value: Value) => void;

  /**
   * Placeholder text to display when editor is empty.
   */
  placeholder?: string;
}

export function EditorField({
  value,
  onChange,
  placeholder = "Type here...",
  ...props
}: EditorFieldProps) {
  // We create our editor instance with the provided initial `value`.
  const editor = usePlateEditor({
    value: value ?? [
      { type: "p", children: [{ text: "" }] }, // Default empty paragraph
    ],
  });

  return (
    <Plate
      editor={editor}
      onChange={({ value }) => {
        // Sync changes back to the caller via onChange prop
        onChange?.(value);
      }}
      {...props}
    >
      <PlateContent placeholder={placeholder} />
    </Plate>
  );
}
```

3. Replace the `<Textarea>` with a `<EditorField>` block:

```tsx
"use client";

import { z } from "zod";
import { useForm } from "react-hook-form";
import { zodResolver } from "@hookform/resolvers/zod";

import {
  Form,
  FormControl,
  FormDescription,
  FormField,
  FormItem,
  FormLabel,
  FormMessage,
} from "@/components/ui/form";
import { EditorField } from "./EditorField"; // Import the component above

// 1. Define our validation schema with zod
const FormSchema = z.object({
  bio: z
    .string()
    .min(10, { message: "Bio must be at least 10 characters." })
    .max(160, { message: "Bio must not exceed 160 characters." }),
});

// 2. Build our main form component
export function EditorForm() {
  // 3. Setup the form
  const form = useForm<z.infer<typeof FormSchema>>({
    resolver: zodResolver(FormSchema),
    defaultValues: {
      // Here "bio" is just a string, but our editor
      // will interpret it as initial content if you parse it as JSON
      bio: "",
    },
  });

  // 4. Submission handler
  function onSubmit(data: z.infer<typeof FormSchema>) {
    alert("Submitted: " + JSON.stringify(data, null, 2));
  }

  return (
    <Form {...form}>
      <form onSubmit={form.handleSubmit(onSubmit)} className="space-y-8">
        <FormField
          control={form.control}
          name="bio"
          render={({ field }) => (
            <FormItem>
              <FormLabel>Bio</FormLabel>
              <FormControl>
                <EditorField
                  {...field}
                  placeholder="Tell us a bit about yourself..."
                />
              </FormControl>
              <FormDescription>
                You can <span>@mention</span> other users and organizations.
              </FormDescription>
              <FormMessage />
            </FormItem>
          )}
        />
        <button type="submit" className="py-2 px-4 bg-primary text-white">
          Submit
        </button>
      </form>
    </Form>
  );
}
```

- Any existing form validations or error messages remain the same.
- For default values, ensure `form.defaultValues.bio` is a valid Plate value (array of nodes) instead of a string.
- For controlled values, use `editor.tf.setValue(formStateValue)` with moderation.

## Best Practices

1. **Use an Uncontrolled Editor**: Let Plate manage its own state, updating the form only when necessary.  
2. **Minimize Replacements**: Avoid calling `editor.tf.setValue` too often; it can break selection, history, or degrade performance.  
3. **Validate at the Right Time**: Decide if you need instant validation (typing) or upon blur/submit.  
4. **Reset Both**: If you reset the form, call `editor.tf.reset()` to keep them in sync.
